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Will Aave Users Get Their Money Back? One Analyst Has a Plan for Kelp’s $230M Debt

21m ago•
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Aave Liquidation Shock $27M Wiped Out After wstETH Oracle Glitch

The post Will Aave Users Get Their Money Back? One Analyst Has a Plan for Kelp’s $230M Debt appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Aave is sitting on up to $230 million in bad debt from the Kelp DAO exploit. The Umbrella safety reserve holds $80 to $100 million, according to analyst estimates. That gap has to come from somewhere, and right now, the options on the table are ugly for everyone involved.

Depositors could take a haircut. stkAAVE stakers could get slashed. Or Kelp DAO could collapse entirely trying to absorb the loss at once.

How do users get their money back?

The Official Plan: Umbrella, Treasury and Unnamed Commitments

Aave’s own service providers are already moving. A formal incident report published on the Aave governance forum on April 20 confirmed the DAO treasury holds $181 million and that indicative commitments from unnamed ecosystem participants are already in place to address the shortfall.

The Umbrella safety reserve, Aave’s built-in backstop, may also be deployed, though it holds an estimated $80 to $100 million, leaving a potential gap if bad debt reaches the worst-case $230 million scenario.

If Umbrella falls short, the next layer is stkAAVE stakers – users who locked their tokens as a protocol backstop and could face slashing to cover residual losses.

Intergovernmental blockchain advisor and analyst Anndy Lian thinks there is a better way.

Read More: Curve Founder Asks ā€œAre We an Industry of Clowns?ā€ After $750M in DeFi Hacks

The Idea: Finance the Debt, Don’t Detonate It

Lian’s proposal centres on a Recovery Token he calls $kRecovery. Instead of forcing an immediate writedown, Kelp DAO would issue $kRecovery to Aave as a structured debt instrument – essentially a promise to repay backed by future protocol revenue.

ā€œInstead of a permanent haircut, Kelp DAO could issue a Recovery Token or Debt IOUs to Aave to cover the $123M–$230M gap,ā€ Lian wrote. ā€œAave users are made whole over time, and Kelp DAO avoids a total collapse of its token price by financing the debt rather than realizing it all at once.ā€

Three Ways Kelp Could Actually Pay This Back

This is where the proposal gets specific and credible.

First, Kelp DAO could mint new KELP governance tokens to buy back $kRecovery. It dilutes existing holders but compresses the repayment timeline from decades to one to two years. Lian calls it a ā€œbail-in by the DAO’s shareholders.ā€

Second, the Arbitrum Security Council has already recovered $71 million. Every dollar recovered accelerates repayment.

Third, and most interesting, is KUSD, Kelp’s stablecoin targeting a 9% yield from institutional finance. If KUSD scales to $500 million in TVL, annual revenue jumps from $4 million to over $20 million. At that rate, even the worst-case $230 million debt clears in under five years from protocol earnings alone.

Why This Matters Beyond Kelp

Lian closes simply: ā€œI have suggested this because I do not want to see retail users get hurt.ā€

If it works, this is not just a Kelp solution. It is a DeFi precedent – a structured recovery path that keeps protocols alive and users whole instead of choosing who takes the loss.

DeFi has needed that playbook for a long time.

21m ago•
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